Didn't Think This Through: Another major flaw of his, he never thinks his plans through. These include: using and advertising the e-helmet and its peripherals when cell phones are smaller and require none, making a new birthday song and expecting people will accept it and pay royalties so he can pay Zak Wylde for singing it, setting off nuclear missiles to make a wasteland instead of use Frylock's time machine to visit the stone age, etc.

Enemy to All Living Things: No form of life is safe around him, especially animals. He killed all of Meatwad's pets by putting them in the microwave, he even killed his own cat because he forgot he killed Meatwad's. He adopted a dog to attract women, kicked it for not doing what it was adopted for, then ate it because his tattoo told him to. One of his favorite past times is to force feed ducks with nitroglycerin to make them explode. He once trespassed on a farm to force feed a cow pork and ranch dressing so that he could flash fry it with batter and cheese for Labor Day.

He may be a selfish, greedy bastard with no remorse for his often absentminded actions, but even he draws the line at certain things, such as poisoning small children with chemical filled balloons at their own birthday parties.

He also looked genuinely horrified when Meatwad implied he was molested in "Deleted Scenes".

He's also really disgusted by the Slurp-A-Lunch place where he and Frylock work at in "Robositter", considering they don't even take the bone out of the meat when they press and liquefy it- he actually asks who came up with it.

For all of his attempts in "The Shaving" to persuade Willie Nelson to kill Carl, he's mortified when he sees the bodies that Willie had been keeping in the attic.

Genius Ditz: Despite his characteristic stupidity, Shake is surprisingly knowledgeable of cooking. He knows how to cook lasagna, steak and eggs, and duck a l'orange, on top of making references to making a balsamic reduction.

Heroic Sacrifice: This being Shake, it's also partially a Senseless Sacrifice, but this time it is well and truly with mostly good intentions. He willingly goes with Meatwad to a planet of clams to get Frylock a new jewel, and later throws himself into harm's way to save Meatwad while meeting his own demise at the hands of his shellfish allergy and a desire to die with glory.

Kick the Dog: Does this a lot, mainly towards Meatwad. Supposedly, he did most of it in a series of misguided events intended to toughen him up.

Killed Off for Real: In the series finale. Subverted in the post-finale episode as he is alive and well after the credits.

Know-Nothing Know-It-All: He insists he is right on everything, especially when Frylock gives a simpler and more rational explanation. This is probably due to him being a Cloudcuckoolander and a complete jerkass at the same time.

Lack of Empathy: Especially towards Meatwad. In "Zucotti Manicotti", he has no problem with traumatizing Meatwad to the point of becoming suicidal.

Large Ham: Shake gets overly dramatic when he starts accusing people, usually Frylock, of outlandish things.

Laughably Evil: Shake is by no means someone you'd wanna meet if he exists in real life, but his douchebag behavior is hilarious to watch.

Made of Iron: Shake can surprisingly enough, endure many amounts of pain without even scoffing it. For example Shake was able to survive being sliced up to cubes in "Intervention" and having his entire middle part of his body ripped off in "Brain Fairy".

Manchild: If Shake doesn't get his way, he will break things, even his own property.

The McCoy: Of the Power Trio that is the Aqua Teens, Shake is an exaggeration of this. That cup body of his is full of impulses and irrationality...and, of course, milkshake.

Never My Fault: At times, Master Shake can take this trope to extreme levels. He's written a self-help book that teaches readers to live this way to succeed in life. It obviously didn't sell, although Shake says it's Frylock's fault because he shut down the website, rather than his advice clearly isn't helpful.

No Indoor Voice: Constantly boasts, shouts, and whines throughout the series.

Not-So-Well-Intentioned Extremist: Later on in the show, he tries to justify his horrible treatment of Meatwad as "Tough Love". However the show has made it very blatantly clear that he just does it to be cruel for the sake of it. It doesn't help either that Shake always makes excuses for his actions and never admits he's at fault.

Out of Focus: The final season. He either plays a supporting to role to the focused character of the episodenote "Mouth Quest", "Brain Fairy", "Hairy Bus", "Knapsack!", and "The Last One Forever and Ever (For Real This Time) (We Fucking Mean It)" or a minor characternote "Sweet C" and "Rabbit, Not Rabbot". This is a noticeable contrast to the last two seasons, where he plays the main role in almost every episode.

Pet the Dog: The two times Shake did something nice for someone was when he found out Frylock was supposedly dying of cancer, and then when he really was dying, and later during the mission to save him sacrifices himself to protect Meatwad from the clams.

Pretty Fly For A Milkshake: Shake's a big fan of rap music. He wants to be like Jay-Z, believes Egypt is boring and doesn't exist anymore because DMX never wrote a song about it, tried (and failed) to get MF Doom to do a collaboration album with him, and tried making a Christmas album while impersonating Flava Flav (complete with grill).

Redemption Equals Death: He spends a surprising amount of time during the series finale being kind, sacrificing himself to save Meatwad after the two are attacked on the planet they travelled to in order to find Frylock a new jewel and save his life. Beforehand, he tells Meatwad that most of his abuse was in the form of Tough Love in his eyes.

The Reveal: The series finale reveals he has a jewel exactly like Frylock's underneath him.

Stuff Blowing Up: He seems to have the power to make things explode whenever he tosses them out of frustration or anger. However, a few other characters have done this in the series, meaning this power isn't unique to him.

Suicide Is Painless: Once killed himself just to mess with Meatwad. And another so he can see a woman naked.

Supreme Chef: While usually incapable of doing anything, Shake has been shown to be really good at cooking, making four-cheese lasagna, cheese-injected fried beef and cakes. Downplayed, since Shake will cook only for 'special occasions' like screwing up Meatwad's diet or torturing Carl. At other times he wouldn't even mind eating cat food.

Talkative Loon: A Running Gag is that when Shake is ignored or outargued, he'll just start saying whatever he can to get attention.

Token Evil Teammate: A bastard who lives to torture his roommates and for personal gain. The other members of the team often do evil things as well, but Shake is unique in that he doesn't need a reason.

Too Dumb to Live: He has sliced himself in half with a katana, eaten a sandwich that he knew would send him to a hell dimension where an axe-wielding cyclops awaited to slice his head open, and has gone as far as committing suicide just to ruin Meatwad's Ouija video game.

In "Shake Like Me", Master Shake gets bitten by a radioactive black man, turns black and becomes much friendlier compared to his original self. Unfortunately, Shake being nice was found to be a bit too creepy, so Frylock returned him to his normal (jerkass) self.

The final season as a whole. while Shake is by no means a Nice Guy this season, he's Jerkass tendencies have been notably toned downnote The sole exception being in "Hospice.. This reaches its peak during the Series Fauxnale, where Shake actually acts nicer towards everyone, reveals to Meatwad that all of the abuse he's been giving him was his (albeit twisted) version of Tough Love and even performs a Heroic Sacrifice to save Meatwad and even Frylock's life.

Actually subverted, as he also has the questionable power that anything he drops or throws will explode. This seems quite random, but considering he was created by Dr. Weird, it's somewhat understandable.

Beware the Nice Ones: He's the nicest Aqua Teen next to Meatwad. Press his buttons though, and that changes right quick.

Bungling Inventor: Among the failures were a robotic babysitter that terrorized Meatwad, an experimental toilet that destroyed Carl's body from the neck down when he used it, and a cloning machine that produced unstable copies of the original that would explode/spew blood/gain sentience. Like the examples above, those that aren't outright failures usually end up causing problems because he doesn't seem to get that his immature/irresponsible roommates can't be trusted with them.

Chubby Chaser: All of his love interests (except for a woman from "Carl") were women of size.

Complete Immortality: Thanks to a magic shampoo he used in the very last episode of the series, Frylock has this. Any injury he sustains is little more than a temporary inconvenience, which he exploits to make extreme gore videos with Carl. Unfortunately, after being imprisoned for murder of a Highlander star, he can't serve out his life sentences because he doesn't age.

Didn't Think This Through: In "Total Re-Carl." After mangling Carl's and several false starts, Frylock rebuilds Carl by giving him a military suit and arming him with weapons of mass destruction. You know just how bad of an idea this was when it's Shake who calls him out on it:

Frylock: I give you the ultimate in military hardware, complete with laser cannon, indestructible titanium exoskeleton and motion-activated plasma pulse rifles. Shake: And you're gonna plug him in?! Frylock: You're right. Damn, what the hell was I thinking?

Eye Beams: Frylock wears contact lenses that shoot just about anything from electricity to fire-retardant foam.

For Science!: Frylock falls into this trope on occasion — the toilet that destroyed Carl's body springs to mind.

The Spock: He's the rational one of the Aqua Teens, and is the only one who can even consider sticking to a plan. Yes, he's a wet blanket, but when your roommates are as dumb as Meatwad and Shake, it's forgivable.

The Straight Man: Carey Means, who plays Frylock, has the added privilege of playing the Straight Man to lines that usually don't even make sense spoken by anthropomorphic food items and stoned two-dimensional aliens.

Yandere: When Frylock develops a crush on a girl - there will be blood.

Meatwad

Meatwad make the money, see? Meatwad get the honeys, G. Drivin' in my car, livin' like a star, ice on my finger, and my toes, and I'm a Taurus.

"Frylock, I'm friends with a toilet paper tube, an apple, and a box. I'm crazy in the head."

A wad of meat. Pretty slow-witted, but he has a good heart. Voiced by Dave Willis.

Achievements in Ignorance: In the finale it's revealed he used to have a jewel like Frylock and Shake, but traded it away. Since he didn't know he needed it to live, he stayed alive.

Ambiguous Disorder: It's heavily indicated that he has some kind of mental disability. In "Super Bowl" and "Ezekial," he outright calls himself "messed up in the head" and retarded in those respective episodes, and in "Rabbot Redux," when Shake complains to Frylock about Meatwad upsetting him, Frylock responds, "He doesn't know any better, and he's never gonna know any better. And you know that."

Breakout Character: Of all three of the Aqua Teens, Meatwad is perhaps the most recognizable. He has died the least amount of times, survived the real and fake finales of the series and has the most appearances outside of his series; he is featured on numerous DVD covers and the Christmas soundtrack without Shake and Frylock, appears in commercials and commercial bumps, had an honest-to-God hot air balloon for a time, and series creator Dave Willis joked about Meatwad appearing in a kid's show. In "Mouth Quest", he's even referred to as the "popular meatball character".

Bumbling Sidekick: He's Frylock's lab assistant. He may not be bright, but he's more stable than Shake.

After over a decade of constant abuse from Master Shake, the series finale reveals that after Shake and Frylock's deaths, Meatwad gets married, starts a family, and overall finally leads a happy, normal life.

The Kirk: Unfortunately, while he tries to be the mediator between Shake and Frylock, he's too laid back, unfocused and dull to make his own decisions, let alone affect theirs.

Living Toys: They're not really toys, but he can still talk to them. The others can talk to them in "Shake Like Me". In "Dumber Dolls", Frylock buys him an actual living toy, which turns out to be The Eeyore.

Made of Iron: He's surprisingly difficult to kill, as he has shrugged off land mines exploding beneath him and cutting him in half merely splits him into two smaller meatwads.

Manchild: He and Frylock basically have a father-son relationship, since Meatwad can't think for himself. Though, as shown in Knapsack, he's actually 6. By the end of the series, he's grown out of this immensely.

Manipulative Bastard: To Master Shake, seriously. Shake often runs circles around him, but Meatwad is surprisingly good at using Shake's vanity and need for attention against him.

Pictorial Speech Bubble: His letters and notes to other characters always consist of crudely sketched figures, objects, and scribbles (most having barely any relevance to what he intended to write), accompanied by a voice-over of him reading "it" aloud.

Shock and Awe: In "Balloonenstein", after Shake puts him in the dryer for a week.

Sole Survivor: With Chicken Bittle killed prior to the series and Frylock and Shake both permanently dying in the series finale, Meatwad is the only member of the Aqua Teens left alive. Except, in the true finale, this isn't true, as all 3 of the Aqua Teens were shown perfectly fine at the end.

Too Dumb to Live: Although he's not nearly as self-destructive as Shake, he still has his moments. In one episode in which Shake covers the floor with land mines to deal with their rat infestation, Meatwad ends up setting off more mines than the rats do. The most notorious example would have to be in "Time Machine", in the episode, Meatwad blindly talks to an exterminator not knowing a MISSILE is coming towards him! It's one of the few episodes where Meatwad actually dies.

Took a Level in Badass: In "Last Dance For Napkin Lad", and in the series finale when it's revealed that he eventually ends up as a mature person with a loving family.

Vocal Evolution: His voice was rather high-pitched and kind of squeaky in the first season. Afterwards, while still a bit high, his voice became deeper and lost some of the squeaking.

Voluntary Shapeshifter: He usually only limits himself to turning into a hotdog or an igloo, since those are the only forms he can usually remember.

Idiot Savant: Although contemptuously ignorant in most everything else, Carl's solo webisodes show that, being a dedicated blue-collar tailgater, he's very knowledgeable about football, even if his locks have a spotty accuracy rate and tend to favor his beloved "New York Football Giants".

In "Storage Zeebles" Carl finds a magical world and then decides to harvest all of its resources while exploiting the native species's kindness. Despite the Zeebles' pleading him to stop harvesting their world, Carl ignores him and practically ransacks the whole dimension. In turn however, Carl is mauled to death by the "Night Wolf", starting from his crotch.

In "Hospice" Carl purposely maxes out his mom's credit card while she's dying of cancer. In turn, Carl's mom (whose cancer has entered remission) decides to burn him alive.

Noodle Incident: Mostly centered around his friend, Terry, who's been in jail for crimes too gruesome to mention.

Only Sane Man: Carl's an ignorant, sex-crazed, crude, lazy bum. On any other show, he'd be the wacky next-door neighbor. However, since he's the neighbour of the Aqua Teens, he's the sane one by default.

STD Immunity: Averted. He's very open about the fact that he has crabs.

Throw the Dog a Bone: When the Cybernetic Ghost of Christmas Past from the Future causes his pool to become filled with elf blood in the first season finale, he sells his house to Danzig for a million dollars and isn't seen for the rest of the episode, so presumably he got his million. Of course, since the show has Negative Continuity he's back at his house again at the start of the next season.

Vocal Evolution: He sounded pretty raspy and not as gruff in the first several episodes as he would later on.

What Happened to the Mouse?: While the Aqua Teens' stories are wrapped up in the series finale, it's never explicitly stated what happened to Carl, though it can be inferred that he finally moved out at some point.

Vitriolic Best Buds: When Carl isn't outright hating the Aqua Teens, their relationship typically falls under this category.

The Mooninites (Ignignokt and Err)

"Some might say the Earth is our moon."

"We're the moon."

"But that would belittle the name of our moon. Which is: The Moon."

Aliens from the moon that look like they'd be better off in an Atari game.

Voiced by Dave Willis (Ignignokt) and Matt Maiellaro (Err).

Anti-Villains: They're more of a nuisance to the Aqua Teens than an actual threat...for the most part.

Arch-Enemy: To the Aqua teens, if only because they're the most recurring "threat".

Big Bad: Sort of. Out of the antagonists of the show, they are the most recurring.

Big Guy, Little Guy: They're both short compared to most of the characters, but Ignignokt is much larger than Err.

Cold Ham: Ignignokt has a monotone voice, but really loves to deliver arrogant speeches, like he's a top-notch evil mastermind, despite Mooninites' actions being nothing more than rowdyism. Made even funnier, that sometimes Ignignokt will just cut his speech, when he runs out of words to say.

Demoted to Extra: Despite being the most notable antagonists of the series, they only get a few scenes in the movie. They were actually planned to have more screen time, but much of it had little to do with the plot and was cut.

Dirty Coward: When confronted for their actions their first instinct is to high tail it and run.

Expy: Ignignokt and Err have the voices and personalities of Baffler Meal Master Shake and Frylock respectively.

Flipping the Bird: Mooninites' signature gesture, and also the running gag for first three episodes centered around them.

Ignignokt I hope they can see this, because I'm doing it as hard as I can.

Freudian Excuse: Played for Laughs in "Moonahujana" when Err tells a sob story about his past (parental issues included), and how everything he does is just a cry for attention.

General Failure: In "The Last one Forever and Ever" Ignignokt is this in spades. Him and Err assemble great part of villains and not-so villains from previous episodes to terrorize Aqua Teens. This ends up with most of the characters being killed by each other due to lack of any organisation or plan whatsoever and, yeah, most of the party members being complete morons.

In "Spacecadeuce" Ignignokt and Err also, presumably, send a bunch of other mooninites to their death by ordering them to investigate a sentient meat-eating spaceship. Just because they had nothing better to do.

Leitmotif: Though the full version never plays outside of the credits (and even then, each episode gets a different verse), the Mooninites do have a theme song, a few riffs from which always appear in episodes where they feature.

Mighty Glacier: Their blaster can vaporize stuff, but the bullets are painfully slow.

Pintsized Powerhouse: Err is barely bigger than Meatwad, but easily supports his partner's entire mass during Quad Laser attack (not so much during Quad Glacier though), and can knock out Carl like no problem.

The Power of Rock: In one episode, they get their hands on the Foreigner Belt—a belt that gives the wearer superpowers based on the band's songs. For example, setting the belt to Cold As Ice gives freezing powers.

Red Oni, Blue Oni: The serene and haughty Ignignokt is blue, while the hyper and aggressive Err is red.

Retr Aux: All moon people are designed to look like 8-bit video game characters. The original plan was to portray them as refugees from a failed Atari game.

Rogues Gallery: They're the most recurring "villains" of the show. Their only real ambition is to rob stores.

Sarcastic Devotee: Err often agrees with Ignignokt's words and actions, still wouldn't mind to goof up his plans or snark at given opportunity.

Err *reads Ignignokt's note* The Gorgotron has destroyed our armies, our villages and our pets. And he has laid ways to our craps'.

Err: Look man. I'm here for you, it's okay. Now, what I want you to do, is drink this. [hands a jar to Ignignokt]Ignignokt: [takes the jars and drinks it] Thank you, Err. What was that thick shake? Err: Well I'll tell you what it is, it's mayonnaise, I found it in the trash can... [Err starts laughing while Ignignokt vomits]Err: ... And it had hair on it! And you drank it! Because I'm your doctor! Do what I say!

Vocal Evolution: Ignignokt sounded rather odd in his first appearance on the show, being emotionless (well, more emotionless than usual) and less suave compared to his subsequent appearances.

The Plutonians (Emory and Oglethorpe)

Pointy aliens from Pluto.

Achievements in Ignorance: They manage to create someone with a vague resemblance to Shake just handing him a photo of Shake, tossing him in a pizza oven, and telling him to wing it.

Anti-Villains: Despite their efforts, they are simply too dumb to make use of them.

The Ditzes: Whilst the Mooninites aren't the brightest of beings themselves, it says something that the Plutonians (especially Oglethorpe) easily fall for their pranks in "Spacecataz" and are hardly able to top them.

Harmless Villain: They plan to conquer the world, but in Frylock's words, they're too incompetent to "take over a damn bowl of Jell-O."

Hyper-Competent Sidekick: Emory is a lot smarter than Oglethorpe, and is much more in tune with reality than he is. Either due to a weak personality, or just not caring enough to say no, he still goes along with what Oglethorpe says.

Insufficiently Advanced Alien: While their ship is sufficiently advanced, they (mainly Oglethorpe) are unbelievably stupid and clearly know nothing about how it works. It's even been shown that they don't even know how a simple reading lamp works. Hell, they mistake their own bodily waste for soap and clean their ship with it!

Only Sane Man: Emory is a lot more grounded in reality than Oglethorpe.

Oglethorpe: We have successfully traveled beyond both space and time through the Fargate...to get free cable!Emory: I think it's a star...gate? Oglethorpe: It's the Fargate. F. It's different from that movie which I have never seen, so how would I copy it? Emory: Chill, man. It's all right, let's just turn it on. Oglethorpe: I just want to make sure we are clear that it's the Fargate. Goes far, get it? And there is no way it came from that movie or that syndicated series based on the movie.Emory: But...it sure was a good movie. Oglethorpe: Yah, yes it was.

Too Dumb to Live: Besides Master Shake and occasionally Meatwad, they are the only characters in the entire series that are dumber than the Mooninites.

Oglethorpe: [After "trapping" Shake in some circular floating laser rings, he brings down a disco ball, believing it to be a god.] Orbnoticus, we seek wisdom; to what evil purpose shall we put our slave to use? [No reply]Emory: ...Maybe he's sleeping. Oglethorpe: DO NOT INSULT ORBNOTICUS OR YOU SHALL BE DAMNED FOREVER TO THE FORBIDDEN ZONE!!Emory: I'm just saying, maybe we should call the installer. I mean, it's the same guy that did the laser rings. Oglethorpe: [Looks over and sees Shake is no longer in the rings.] THE PRISONER! HE'S ESCAAAAAPED!!Shake: (Standing right next to the rings) Nah, I'm over here. Hey, that disco ball is pretty cool. Oglethorpe: This is Orbnoticus, and he is all-knowing. Shake: Then why ain't he saying Jack crap? [In the background, we see the spaceship they're in suddenly begin hurdling down toward Earth.]Emory: Yeah, man. How come? Oglethorpe: Because silence is his wisdom. Obviously he's busy navigating us through the stars and— [Suddenly notices they're about to crash.] OH MY GOODNESS!! [Spaceship crashes, Emory and Oglethorpe, carrying the disco ball rush out of a hole in their ship and run away.] Go, go, go! Emory: We're goin'! Oglethorpe: Do not look back, just go!

Running Gag: He always wants to return to his home planet, whether it's Dick Planet, Tooth Planet, or Burger Planet.

You're Insane!: And by "Creature From Plaque Lagoon", he's fully aware of it.

Frylock: You're a madman, Wong Burger!

Wong Burger: Eyeah, I KNOW THAT!

Voluntary Shapeshifting: In each of his appearances after "Dickesode", he's modified himself with a different body, changing from a "dick with balls of rage", to a tooth, and then a giant hamburger. He always keeps his face and glasses, though.

MC Pee Pants: We take these monsters, right? We start a haunted house! Yeah? Yeah, you feel me? And we invite everyone to the haunted house, and they come thinking it's gonna be all scary and shit, but in fact, the house is also for sale 'cause it's a condo, get it? Like in "Hilton Head." And people are gonna pay big-ass cash money to buy this, right? And then we take all that money and buy MORE psychedelic mushrooms, YOU FEEL ME?!

That's supposed to be a plan to "defeat" the Aqua Teens. And "Defeat," in this case, is very ill-defined.

Mind-Control Music: This is his main schtick. He places subliminal messages in catchy rap songs to rope people into his insane schemes. For instance, in his first appearance, his plan was to brainwash listeners into eating so much candy that their increased blood sugar could power a drill to bore into Hell.

Meaningful Name: His Sir Loin persona was a cow and Little Brittle is a brittle old man.

Never Learned to Read: Despite being a lyricist, he is illiterate. This is used against him when he's a cow; convinced that a sign that clearly says "slaughterhouse" reads "bank", he walks right to his doom.

A group of three talking fruits, consisting of Bert Banana, Tammy Tangerine, and Mortimer Mango, who are all Born-Again Christians, as well as recovering drug addicts.

The Alcoholic: All of them are former drug addicts, but Bert has a violent relapse after he finds out Frylock has rum. After Mortimer pours it down the sink, he's actually desperate enough to drink it that he wants to find a monkey wrench and drink it out of the pipes. After that, he goes on a rampage throughout the Aqua Teens' house, demanding cocaine from his friends.

Anthropomorphic Food: Much to the main trio's surprise, they're another trio of talking food. Frylock met them online, and assumed their pictures were just silly internet avatars.

Face–Heel Turn: At first, they're friendly towards Frylock and Meatwad, albeit pushy about their religion. However, Bert has a violent relapse and turns on everyone, demanding cocaine. Mortimer and Tammy then join him after Frylock tells them that Shake is filled with crystal meth.

Fingore: Mortimer lost two of his fingers when he was building a birdhouse on drugs. Bert also apparently used to beat up Tammy so hard that he needed his hands to be completely amputated and replaced.

The Fundamentalist: All three of them are extremely Christian and try to push their beliefs on Frylock. However, it's clear that they only turned to Jesus to try and get out of their drug addictions.

Dr. Weird

"Gentlemen, BEHOOOOOLD!"

A mad scientist who works out of an abandoned insane asylum in Jersey.

Disproportionate Retribution: Several times. He once spliced his roommate Randal's DNA with a fried pork chop for not paying his half of the utilities. Another time, he sent spiders through the phone line to attack a telemarketer who mispronounced his name. Then there was the time that he pulled his brain out of his head and started firing lasers at Steve because Steve didn't bring him lunch. There was also the time that he fired several exploding tacos from his mouth at the janitor for picking up his medallion.

Turns out to be a zigzagging trope as Dr Weird then insists Fry is his father, then Walter Melon shows up and says he's all their fathers. By the time their mother, a seven layer burrito, shows up, nobody except Meatwad even cares and the movie goes straight to credits. And then it was revealed in 2010 by series creator Dave Willis that Dr. Weird did create the Aqua Teens, and that Walter Melon was simply one of Weird's creations used for his insane and convoluted plot to mess with the Aqua Teens.

Jerkass: When his antics aren't outright insane, they're usually intentionally harmful to Steve.

Meaningful Name: Everything that he does is weird (sometimes even beyond that), though this could be explained by him living in what once was an insane asylum. His antics include teaching his ass to eat his hand, making love to (and impregnating) a lawn mower, sending spiders through the phone lines to telemarketers, tricking Steve into allowing corn to mate with him...twice, using a chain saw to cut off his flesh in order to lose weight, injecting himself with large amounts of barbecue sauce, cutting off his own head so that the blood spraying out of his neck will propel him all the way to Phoenix, asking Steve to agitate a snake coiled up inside his helmet, and much, MUCH more.

A.I. Is a Crapshoot: His sinister nature can be chalked up to the side effects from the software that created him, which made it illegal in 80 countries and with a warning not to actually make your own dog.

Community

Tropes HQ

TVTropes is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available from thestaff@tvtropes.org. Privacy Policy